Archive for the ‘Technology’ category

“If you believe S. E. Hinton is engaging in abusive behavior on Twitter, you may report S. E. Hinton for spam.”

October 31st, 2011

Oh, technology.

First, the autocorrect on my phone changed “S.E. Hinton” to “S.E. Hilton”, making me look like I was clueless about one of my students’ favorite authors as I posted about her on Twitter. Then, I get an email from Twitter giving me an option to report the queen of YA for SPAM abuse.

But then I think about a benefit of instant access through technology: I was able to go back and forth with one of Young Adult literature’s finest. She was friendly and had guessed that it was an autocorrect error.

She’s at se4realhinton on Twitter. Give her a message.

FlashNotes – A game to speed up note recognition

October 19th, 2011

If you’re looking to practice note identification, a great resource for that is FlashNotes. It’s sorted by clef and skill level.

Treble – Beginner
Treble – Advanced

Bass – Beginner
Bass – Advanced

I especially like the frantic music in the background and the countdown timer. Nice find, Mr. Durham.

Class Parrot

October 7th, 2011

I am really intrigued by Class Parrot, a service that lets you set up a text message subscriber list for your classroom.

As a teacher, you create classes on the main site and Class Parrot creates an opt-in code that parents and students can text to Class Parrot to sign up for messages.

The thing that really grabs my attention is that you use the site, not your phone, to send out messages. Your cell number is not used. Also, you don’t know student and parent cell numbers. The only numbers people need are the opt-in code and Class Parrot.

I’m going to look more into the service and see if it’s something that we can do to better communicate with our community.

TenMarks

September 26th, 2011


At TenMarks, teachers can create online classes for students to practice Math lessons aligned to the common core standards.

Teachers and students can track academic progress, honing in on which Math concepts need more practice. There’s also a game unlock system, which adds a little bit of motivation.

Once you understand that sending a message in TenMarks is the equivalent of assigning homework, the interface is clear and useful. This is perfect for teachers wanting a way for students to practice Math at home for reinforcement.

New page: Technology in Education

September 15th, 2011

I don’t know why I didn’t do this before. I use a lot of different websites with many different teachers, so I’m going to dedicate a page on this site to organizing all of those sites.

The new page is called ‘Technology in Education‘.

It will be a growing list, so check back frequently.

Renting books

September 12th, 2011

I’ve talked with friends before about a Netflix-like service where you could mail in a book and get a new one sent to you. The obvious limitation is that a book weighs significantly more than a DVD.

Now Amazon is in talks about renting ebooks to readers.

I wonder how this will fare, considering gutenberg.org and a number of other sites offer free books for keeps. Public libraries also offer free ebooks for a time, like the Southeast Regional Library’s Overdrive service. I guess it will come down to an issue of cost versus selection.

Is Netflix trying to psych us out?

August 26th, 2011

edited 8/26/11 4:40pm: Clear your cookies for Netflix. Cookies store passwords and other information for websites. If you don’t want to clear all your cookies, you can check your browsing history and right-click (in Firefox) on the site in the list and ‘Forget this site’. It will look different on other browsers, but the idea is the same.

As September 1, and the new Netflix pricing, approaches, many people I’ve talked to are ditching the DVD portion of their Netflix subscription.

I find it interesting that since last night I’ve seen this on Netflix’s homepage:

Are they trying to prove that streaming is not reliable? It’s just on the website; my 360 is still streaming fine. Will the website have improvements? Is Netflix going to surprise us with a Watch Instantly library that includes more than low-budget movies from the early 90s? Is this another attack from Anonymous?

Whatever the cause for the outage, have you seen downrightnow.com? For any website, you can visit this site instead of hitting refresh over and over again (if you’re like me). downrightnow can help you diagnose if the site is really down or if it’s simply on your end of things.

Open Yale courses

August 16th, 2011

Back in 2008, I mentioned iTunes U. The selection of great, free academic content has continued to grow.

Yale partners with iTunes, but also has its own site that is easy to navigate. You can download straight from the site if you’re not a fan of iTunes.

With my phone, I had to go to the downloads page for the course to get the file. The other ways required Flash or QuickTime.

Spotify, Figment, and PenCamp

July 19th, 2011

This weekend was big for finding technology, especially for school. All of these are free, which is great!

The first one, Spotify, is more for at home since it requires an installation, but I’m trying to figure out what the catch is. Spotify lets you listen to music like Pandora does. The big difference is that you can choose any music track to jump to AND create a playlist to play the music in the order you want to. My complaint with Pandora is that when I create a station for an artist, many times it takes five or six songs until I get to that actual artist. I’m one of the early adopters for the US version of the service. Once it’s open to the public, check it out.

Figment is a writing community where you can post your own works-in-progress and get updates from authors that you follow. They have disabled anonymous comments in an effort to build a place free from spamming and flamewars.

The last thing I found really got me excited because I know exactly which project I can have students use it for. PenCamp allows students to create a simple webpage with a password but does not require a username. The students title their page, choose a password that prevents others from erasing their work, and then share their URL with teachers to grade. Since there are no comments at all, it should avoid some of the hangups with posting online – as long as student names are not used in the title of the page. The URLs are super easy: example.pencamp.com. No slashes, no random numbers, no craziness (unless you put it there).

ESRB for the mobile platform

June 30th, 2011

I just took a survey asking for my thoughts on the ESRB starting to rate mobile video games and it got me thinking about just how much I use the ESRB. The ESRB rates video games much like how the Rating Board rates movies. If you’re a parent, check out their site. They do a really good job of describing what’s in a video game. If you’re a gamer, check them out because they usually have the details for a game before even the news sites like IGN can get an update.

But with mobile video games, many apps are coded by small companies and not traditional publishers. That’s the beauty of the self-publishing online game marketplace. There’s a downside, though. The descriptions for the games in the marketplace don’t do the games justice and frequently leave me wondering what in the world the game is about.

Having the ESRB start to rate games would be helpful because that’s what they’re good at. I cringe at some of the summaries game developers put up. I would like a consistent style that gave me information about the game. Some of the proposed information will be whether the game takes your personal information and if the app transmits your location. That’s there in the marketplace, but depending on the store may only show up after you’ve already clicked on the app. A database with the ESRB’s established credibility will be nice.

I’m excited for the ESRB to start helping out. If anything, it shows that mobile gaming is becoming a legitimate platform.